The Macomb Daily

Bruins get Bertuzzi; Quick goes to Vegas before deadline

- By John Wawrow and Stephen Whyno

Jonathan Quick is on the move again, back to the Pacific Division to solve the Vegas Golden Knights’ latest goaltendin­g quandary.

Vegas acquired Quick from Columbus on Thursday, less than 36 hours after the Los Angeles Kings traded the two-time Stanley Cupwinning goaltender and 2014 playoff MVP to the Blue Jackets.

After losing All-Star starter Logan Thompson to an injury, the Golden Knights sent a 2025 seventh-round pick and journeyman netminder Michael Hutchinson to complete the deal with Columbus, which retained half of Quick’s salary.

“We wish him all the best wherever that is,” Kings captain Anze Kopitar. “What I want for him is to go to a place where he has a chance obviously to play.”

Quick getting dealt again leaves Philadelph­ia winger James van Riemsdyk and Anaheim defenseman John Klingberg as the top players left to be traded before the 3 p.m. EST Friday deadline.

Already 84 players — including Quick twice and counting the contracts of Shea Weber and Jakub Voracek — and 56 draft picks have been traded since the All-Star break, leaving slim pickings for what’s usually a frantic final day.

“I haven’t seen anything like it at all,” Boston Bruins president Cam Neely said. “I think everybody is looking at their clubs and saying, ‘We have a chance.’ And we’re no different, obviously, with the season we’ve had.”

Neely’s NHL-leading Bruins got the action going Thursday by acquiring winger Tyler Bertuzzi from Detroit for a top-10 protected first-round pick in 2024 and a fourth-rounder in 2025, the latest move by a Stanley Cup contender to keep pace in the loaded Eastern Conference. The Red Wings are retaining half of Bertuzzi’s salary for the rest of the season.

Bruins coach Jim Montgomery called Bertuzzi an excellent player and a “great complemen

tary winger.”

“He’s someone that understand­s how to win,” Montgomery said, citing Bertuzzi’s success in junior hockey and as playoff MVP when Grand Rapids won the American Hockey League’s Calder Cup in 2017. “He goes hard to hard areas. He’s a great net-front guy, 5 on 5, power play. He’s got a lot of sandpaper to him.”

Bertuzzi is a 28-year-old pending free agent winger who gives Boston depth up front and insurance for injured winger Taylor Hall. The team put Hall on longterm injured reserve, ruling him out until late March.

Enter Bertuzzi, who has himself been limited by injuries this season. He has 14 points in 29 games.

Bertuzzi has 88 goals and 114 assists in 305 regular-season games. He has yet to reach the playoffs in the NHL.

That will almost certainly change next month. The Bruins are on pace for 64 wins and 135 points, which would be the best regular season in hockey history with records in each of those categories.

Four years since the Lightning tied the league record for wins and got swept in the first round of the playoffs, the Bruins aren’t standing pat. They got defenseman Dmitry Orlov and forward Garnet Hathaway from Washington last week — a deal that made them bigger and tougher in advance of a rough road through the East.

It got rougher in recent days.

Metropolit­an Divisionle­ading Carolina acquired defenseman Shayne Gostisbehe­re and winger Jesse Puljujarvi, the New York Rangers traded for threetime Stanley Cup champion Patrick Kane, the Islanders got depth forward Pierre Engvall, Tampa Bay gave up five picks for 25-yearold forward Tanner Jeannot, Pittsburgh shuffled its roster to bring in Mikael Gralund and Toronto continued a roster makeover that has added up to six new players joining the Maple Leafs.

 ?? PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Detroit Red Wings left wing Tyler Bertuzzi (59) celebrates his goal against the Edmonton Oilers, Tuesday, in Detroit.
PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Detroit Red Wings left wing Tyler Bertuzzi (59) celebrates his goal against the Edmonton Oilers, Tuesday, in Detroit.

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